3 minute read
Professional Dad
As a veteran journalist with 35 years’ experience in broadcast media, including 33 years at the ABC as a London foreign correspondent, a reporter for AM, PM, The World Today and in the Canberra Press Gallery, Mark Tamhane (1984) is finally hanging up the headphones to take on a new profession, as a full-time dad.
“Based in London between 1996 and 2000, I covered some pretty big stories like the death of Princess Diana and the Northern Ireland peace deal. When I came back to Australia, I worked on Lateline and AM and at NewsRadio in Sydney. In 2017 I moved back to Melbourne and worked at ABC Radio before joining ABC News Breakfast.”
Tamhane said while he had always put a high value on being a present parent, COVID-19 had shown him and a lot of other fathers, just how important it is to be there for your children. And so he is stepping back from work to stay at home with his young kids.
Tamhane’s family spans almost three decades; with three children from his first marriage and three with his second wife, former ABC reporter, Emily Bourke.
“My eldest son Jamie (25) is a climate scientist. I’m just in awe at how he can wrap his head around a scientific problem in a way I never could.
My eldest daughter Juliette (22) is training to be a nurse. She was a keen gymnast and represented Australia in skipping. She’s an incredible human being who has inherited my very dry sense of humour.
My second eldest daughter Mia (18) is a fabulous student - brilliant and ridiculously well organised (unlike me!). She could do anything and would excel at it.”
His youngest three include Jack, Charlotte and Grace. “Jack (8), has overcome some setbacks early on and is just a really lovely, well-rounded kid. He adores his older siblings. Charlotte (6) is thriving at school and is very, very determined, and the youngest, Grace (4), is possibly the most annoying child in the history of the universe….no, seriously; she’s very intelligent, feisty and is fast developing a zany sense of humour.”
“All of my kids are very impressive individuals who I admire in different ways.”
As an only child, Tamhane said he never imagined having so many children, but his experience has given rise to a series of articles about parenting for ABC Everyday, being invited onto podcasts such as The Briefing and The Dad Mindset and addressing a men’s health conference. His work is also featured on his MarkTamhane.com blog. “I’ve been really chuffed at the positive reception I’ve received after writing and speaking honestly about parenting from the perspective of a dad of six.” While Tamhane has taken over a lot of the parenting duties, Emily works full time. “Emily is an unbelievably hard working journalist who somehow manages to balance work with being a busy mum. She was the one who encouraged me to write about my experience of fatherhood.”
Being at home also gives Tamhane the opportunity to support his parents. “I’m very lucky that both of my parents are still alive. They are both admirable people, very modest but with a strong social conscience and a great perspective on life. As an only child, I promised my parents I would look after them and do everything I could to make sure they could live independently as long as possible.”
Studies. At one stage we even set up a ‘radio station’ called 3DLS which was basically two speakers blasting during recess and lunchtime into an indoor corridor that linked two buildings.”
“De La Salle provided me with an exceptionally well rounded education. We seemed to do a bit of everything during my time there.
“I also got a fabulous grounding in English, Literature, History and Australian Politics from exceptional teachers like Barry Dyball and Kathy Schneider. My teachers, the Brothers and the then chaplain, Fr. Les Troy weren’t afraid to talk about mistakes they’d made and lessons they’d learnt in the ‘school of life’, and many of those wise words have stayed with me all these years later.”
Media was always in Tamhane’s DNA. His maternal grandfather was a newspaper journalist, writer and editor and his paternal grandfather was a photographer. It was as a student at De La Salle College, he started dabbling.
“My friend Anthony Horan and I spent a lot of time fiddling around with sound and audio visual systems during Media
For example, my young son Jack asked me about perspective in a drawing he’d done the other night and I realised I could explain it to him, because we’d been required to do graphics (with Br Brian Cunningham) in Year 8. And then there was the French I learned with Br Julian Watson and Italian in Year 7. That certainly helped when I did a lot of travelling in Europe.”
By Kerry Martin